Wednesday, 16 February 2011

Random Fletch pre-Christmas Musings....

Published December 22nd, 2010



Weird week. Lots of rumours, rumblings, movings and shakings within the MMA world.
Mousasi vs Kyotaro booked for K-1 Dynamite. If you’re wondering why this may be strange, consider that a year ago Mousasi was an MMA middleweight, that Kyotaro is the K-1 Heavyweight champion, and that this fight will be contested under K-1 rules.

Mental. FEG strike again, playing on the fearlessness of their talent to book stupid matches. I’m not saying Mousasi has absolutely no chance whatsoever, but the cards are stacked, and a particularly vicious KO could perhaps make a dent in the career of one of MMA’s most promising “rising stars” under the age of 25 – that is, if the veteran can even still be labelled a ‘rising’ star!

In anticipation of what I deem to be the TRUE Sengoku Featherweight Grand Prix final, I watched both champ Sandro against challenger and Shooto champ Hioki, in their fights against the newly departed Omigawa. Halfway through the Hioki fight, I turned off the video, and struggled to avoid putting my screen through with my clenched, shaking fists. One thing the excercise did for me, however, is convince me that the Soul of Fight meeting between the Brazzo champ and the Japanese challenger will be contested between the very best  in Japan. These two are the creme de la creme, for sure.

UFC will host a 2011 event in Brazil. Clearly, with three Brazilian champions, they have the potential to stack a card and give us long-suffering fans a Pride-esque showing. Booking title defences for Aldo, Anderson and Shogun would top UFC 100 in terms of heavy, unwatered quality… but then again, Zuffa will likely book one of those men, and water the rest of the card down in order to promote another numbered event within three weeks. Money talks, and Zuffa are talkative. Stacked cards are Japanese only territory.

Fedor has been involved in a “will he, wont he” scenario concerning the January 29th 2011 Strikeforce card. It was loudly rumoured that Bigfoot Silva would be the man to face him, and that it would be part of the Strikeforce 8-man Heavyweight Grand Prix. As M-1 are currently negotiating, renegotiating and re-renegotiating, it is as yet unclear (there are many conflicting reports) if Fedor will actually face Silva, and if the bout would be part of the tournament if so.

Fingers crossed. Like it or not (personally, I like M-1 as an organisation) the protracted contract negotiations will undoubtedly stick in the memory once Fedor retires. This kind of thing gives the new breed of zuffa zombie MMA fan fuel to the fire that Fedor is such blasphemous things as “overrated”, “overhyped” and “not the greatest”.

Let us hope that – tournament apart – he fights soon, fights hard, and increases his activity. One fight a year these days just doesn’t cut it anymore.

As for the Strikeforce HWGP, what an epic tournament that could possibly be. It will mark the first time since 2006 that the organisation with the most stacked heavyweight division would put on a tournament featuring those fighters.

The expected names to be involved will draw from this talent pool:

*Alistair Overeem
*Fabricio Werdum
*Fedor Emelianenko
*Antonio Silva
*Josh Barnett
*Sergei Kharitonov
*Shane Del Rosario
*Andrei Arlovski
*Brett Rogers

Fantastic stuff.

There are rumblings that Satoru Kitaoka could be heading to the UFC. If you are unfamiliar with this man, let me cut a long story short and say that he was the Sengoku Lightweight champ, and it took a fired up pre-Aoki arm-snap victim Mizuto Hirota to relieve him of that belt. He also stretched Paul Daley with ease back in Pancrase, putting a true catch-as-catch-can clinic on the now top 10, dangerous and feared welterweight.
I hope he stays in Japan. Kid, Omigawa and Kitaoka to UFC, all within the same fortnight? What next, Aoki, Sandro and Hioki? Terrible.

Just on the Brazil UFC card – rumours are that Royce Gracie will be tempted out of retirement to fight on it. How ridiculous – people used his shambolic UFC 60 return to claim that it “proved” that the “new breed” of MMA fighter was more advanced. What exactly did it prove? Back in the day, the only art Royce used was Brazilian Jiu Jitsu, he had no other fighting skills. Matt Hughes was a well rounded fighter, this is true. But had he not trained for 11 years in BJJ himself, could he have beaten Royce? Besides, Royce was in his 40′s by then, it was ludicrous. The fight proved nothing, except that Royce Gracie himself was one-dimensional, and too old at that stage to match up with a current star.

Chael Sonnen is angling for a fight with Wanderlei Silva. This much is obvious, given the twitter messages the outspoken American has been sending. This would certainly be one fight that even the usual patriotic American fans would be cheering for Wand in. Personally, I find Sonnen’s schtick amusing, but this time it reeks of desperation to stay relevant and in the news. After being submitted late in his title bout with Anderson, Chael failed a drugs test, and the hype surrounding his name noticeably cooled. Clearly, he wants to stay in the limelight as long as possible, and twitter beefs may well – sadly – be a decent way of going about it in the technology age.
Stay tuned – World Victory Road presents: Soul of Fight, and K-1 Dynamite previews to come.
Fletch

Fletch Blog: Thomson Bout Could Be Career Revival for Kawajiri the Crusher

Published on various sites, December 21st 2010



Tatsuya Kawajiri is an elite fighter.

There are many fans of MMA out there who have never seen Kawajiri perform, I would wager. There are many in the western world who would compile their top 10 rankings and not give The Crusher a thought. Well, that is their problem; Tatsuya Kawajiri is a top lightweight, and he still has plenty left in his tank. And if the rumoured bout with Strikeforce challenge and former champion Josh Thomson comes to fruition, the former Shooto champion and Pride star has a very good shot at a dramatic career upswing.

Kawajiri has been labelled by some hardcore fans – unfairly – as a bridesmaid. The reasoning being that while he was the reigning Shooto champion, he was unable to emerge victorious in the Pride Lightweight Grand Prix, nor in his fight against fellow top 5 ranked fighter Gilbert Melendez at Shockwave 2006, nor could he win the Dream Lightweight Grand Prix in 2008, and most recently in his attempt to remove the Dream championship from around Shinya Aoki’s waist, he suffered ankle injuries after refusing for quite some time to submit to the heel hook that Aoki managed to secure on him early in the bout. These factors combine to add fuel to the fire of detractors, who say quite simply; Kawajiri is the bridesmaid, never the bride.
Against Thomson, this could all change. One has to feel that with one big win, Crusher will redeem himself and launch himself back onto the world map; a map that some feel he hasn’t entirely left as it stands anyway.

I feel Kawajiri is much better than he is viewed. The man is a warrior; a ground’n'pound style wrestler, who dominated a K-1 veteran in Kozo Takeda, and shows great thai-boxing abilities and a willingness to stand and trade. He was indeed once widely considered the #1 ranked lightweight in the world for a time – something that the aforementioned detractors vehemently disagree with – when he won the Shooto welterweight (154lbs) championship, beating elite lightweight Vitor “Shaolin” Ribiero. A title defence in Shooto later, and two wins in Pride Bushido events, and DreamStage Entertainment matched the top 2 ranked lightweights in the world up, in their Lightweight Grand Prix; Kawajiri, and the Fireball Kid, Takanori Gomi.
Gomi would emerge victorious, via chokeout in round 1, but the bout was deemed Fight of the Year by most MMA outlets at the time. The two went to war, it was an exceptional showing by both men, and while Kawajiri would never again be considered the #1 to this day, he has never slipped from the top 10, and always shows up to put on a show.

Tainted victory over a legend came next, as Joachim “Hellboy” Hansen was disqualified after only eight seconds for a low blow. On paper, this set Crusher back in motion, as Hellboy was another member of that Golden Generation from Shooto, and is the only man to beat Gomi, JZ Calvan, Caol Uno, Rumina Sato and three years after this point, Shinya Aoki. Kawajiri rolled over Charles Krazy Horse Bennet, and two wins later earned a high profile fight with the-then undefeated #2 ranked lightweight and p4p listed Gilbert Melendez, on Pride’s Shockwave 2006 card.
Again, misfortune struck. After a very close fight between the two elite combatants, Melendez got the nod unanimously from the judges; a decision that many feel should have gone Kawajiri’s way. This win would have solidified Kawajiri firmly in the top 3, and potentially earned him a rematch with Gomi for the Pride belt and the bragging rights of Japan. As it was, any momentum he may have had was once again depleted, and Kawajiri was the contender; not the champion. The bridesmaid; not the bride.

It was a year before Crusher fought again; outpointing capable Chute Boxe fighter Luis Azeredo on the Yarennokka card that was essentially a farewell to PrideFC. Then, he signed for Fighting Entertainment Group, in the fledging successor to Pride and its amalgamation of sorts with the existing Hero’s; DREAM.

Two Grand Prix wins later, and Kawajiri stood facing the American Eddie Alvarez for a shot at Aoki in the finals. With Gomi at this stage in decline, the Crusher was the clear cut #2 lightweight in Japan behind Aoki, who was consensus #1 after an incredible resume in that weight class over the last three years. It was Crushers chance to not only reclaim (or to finally earn) the #1 ranking and Japanese bragging rights, but to earn his first major championship outside of the Shooto belt. And in this consensus Fight of the Year for 2008…. he was stopped, late in round 1.

Again, he bounced back. After choking out Ross Ebanez to get back in the winners circle, Kawajiri faced off against the former K-1 Hero’s champion and still-top ranked fighter Gesias “JZ” Cavalcante. And in the fight itself, Crusher defied the tag of “bridesmaid” by dominating the fight with both his ground and pound, ground control, and in winning the striking exchanges on the feet. He proved his superiority over a champion, and once more put his name back among the very best few 155lbs fighters in the world.

He defeated Sengoku contender Kazunori Yokota at Dynamite 2009 to further solidify his standing as Japan’s #2, and waited patiently until June, when he finally got his shot; a match against former (and future) training partner and friend, Japan’s premier fighter, the Dream and WAMMA lightweight champion, Shinya Aoki.
Many felt that this was finally Kawajiri’s time. They pointed out that Melendez, whom Crusher had arguably beaten, comfortably dealt with Aoki’s takedown attempts in Aoki’s stateside cage debut, and that Melendez and Kawajiri were well-matched skillwise. They pointed out that Kawajiri could be deemed to have superior submission defence to Eddie Alvarez, also a powerful wrestler-striker, whom Aoki had surprised with an unorthodox takedown into a heel hook. The odds were even; many felt that it was Kawajiri’s time to shine.

What transpired that night, would be the worst night of his career. In a fight reminiscent of the Alvarez/Aoki fight, the Dream champion used the same leg grapevine takedown into a heel hook early in the fight, and though Crusher bravely held out for a minute, eventually the fight was called off. Kawajiri was dominated; embarrassed, and injured.

But don’t write him off. Back training with Aoki, this man has the potential to beat ANY lightweight in the world on his best day. And he isn’t done yet.

The rumour mill is swirling, and apparently Josh Thomson could be next in line to face the Crusher at Dream’s Dynamite card on New Years Eve. This fight could be perfect for Tatsuya to bounce back. Thomson just beat JZ Calvan; he is a former Strikeforce champion with excellent wrestling and decent standup. But is his wrestling any better than a motivated Kawajiri’s? Is his standup on par with a man who destroyed a K-1 veteran in Takeda, and went two rounds with the legendary K-1 MAX champion Masato?

This could be THE fight in which Crusher bounces back into the title mix, and earns a shot at the elites. He is 32; there is time yet. His last fight against Aoki aside, Kawajiri is not yet a wartorn, battle-scarred old veteran, slowing down and at the end. He is still an elite, dangerous warrior who could give any lightweight on the planet fits. And after the Aoki embarrassment, he will be more dangerous than ever. He is on the ropes, and defeat now would be disastrous. This is his time to make a statement.
If this fight goes down, look for a Kawajiri win from softening Thomson up on the feet before ending it with ground’n'pound.

At least, this Crusher fan hopes so…. it is time he became all that he could be.

And that equates to one word; champion.

Fletch

Fletch Blog: Kid & Omigawa to UFC-land; This Japanophile Thanks God for Sengoku...

Published on various sites, December 20th 2010



Two more Japanese MMA superstars are heading stateside.
Now, whereas my American brothers from East to West now have an exponentially better chance of seeing P4P God Kid and the man “whom the featherweight division revolves around” (in his own mind), this simply means that I – a pathetically biased British Japanophile – now have to deal with yet another blow to the flagging Japanese scene. Thank the Lord above for World Victory Road’s epic Soul of Fight card: without it, I may not have made it through the Christmas holidays without turning into the fight game’s Ebeneezer Scrooge.

It should come as no surprise that Omigawa has left for the UFC. His ego is such that despite his obvious Yoshida Dojo ties helping him to gift decisions over the best two featherweights in JMMA, Marlon Sandro and Hatsu Hioki, he left for Dream, beat Takaya and some comparative cans, and then declared that the featherweight division ‘revolves around him’. He then called out Dream Lightweight champ Shinya Aoki to a fight at Dynamite, and has now decamped for America.

The guy is an animal, but I can no longer stand him. Any man who steals the perfect 18-0 record from my #1 featherweight in MMA, Marlon Sandro, depriving him of the chance to win the SRC Featherweight Grand Prix, and who defects from JMMA to the UFC, ain’t cool in my book. Disclaimer: this does not reflect the views of IFI as a whole, but FletchBlogs are ‘my book’.

No Cat No Life? Not for me, sonny Jim. For me it’s no JMMA no life, and the Japanese featherweight scene has suffered as a result of its two biggest and best dropping gift decisions to a man who promptly leaves for UFC. Now if Omigawa gets grapple-f*cked, or if Jose Aldo tears him apart, how does that reflect on Japan?
Horrible news for me. The best I can hope for is that he at least works his way to a shot against the mercurial Aldo, and then I can perhaps dare to dream. I may even forgive him for the darkness that was Sengoku 9.

Kid leaving for the UFC is one that I am a little more OK with. Yes, a star has left, but that star has faded in recent years. After taking a hiatus from the sport due to his desire to compete as a wrestler at the 2008 Olympics, Kid Yamamoto returned to the MMA world with two consecutive losses – unthinkable for the undersized juggernaut who had previously torn through a 22-1 record that included a K-1 Hero’s Middleweight (154lbs) Grand Prix triumph, despite having a ‘natural’ weight of around 135lbs or so. Kid was a phenom, and in losing to the talented rookie Joe Warren and Sengoku’s official Grand Prix champion Masanori Kanehara (a man who had lost in the tournament, and replaced a finalist due to injury) Kid clearly displayed a lack of motivation. Something just wasn’t there, and it was feared that he was a star that burned out fast. And one quick win over an over-matched opponent later, and the fears haven’t completely subsided.

Either way…whether or not Kid reclaims his place at the top of either the Bantamweight or Featherweight divisions, it will be a pleasure to watch him.

And the nostalgia in me can’t help but remember the fevered debate of the old days…’Kid vs Faber, who would win?’ Well, now we may just find out. I just hope they both have enough left in them to put on the epic showing that they both deserve from each other.

Though on saying that…I wouldn’t complain at another four second flying bicycle tiger knee knockout from Kid!

So what, you ask, have Sengoku got to do with the price of chips?

Well my lovelies, they happen to be putting on an epic end 0f year show. Last year was disastrous – the World Victory Road boys put their finest on the line in a co-promotion of sorts with Dream at K-1 Dynamite, and some of the top boys got stuffed. Sengoku lightweight champ Mizuto Hirota had his arm snapped by a copper lock from the imperious Shinya Aoki, and Kazuo Misaki got smashed by the fury of Manhoef. Kawajiri beat Yokota in a battle of contenders from either promotion, and Alistair Overeem kneed Kazuyuki Fujita so hard in the head that the big Japanese fella still has nightmares about horses. It was largely disastrous for WVR.

This year is different. FEG’s attempts to organise Dynamite have been shambolic, and World Victory Road presents: Soul of Fight looks to be more epic than all three (yes, three) Die Hard films combined with Con Air and The Rock. For y’all action junkies out thur’.

Sandro vs Hioki? THIS, my pedigree chums, is the TRUE final of the Sengoku Featherweight Grand Prix. With Sandro robbed (as aforementioned) and Hioki suffering concussion in his victory, the actual final was basically contested between the two guys that LOST their semi-finals!

The winner will be – in my honest opinion – the #1 featherweight in the world. Now, if only Sandro and teammate Jose Aldo had some kind of major falling out… wouldn’t that be nice?

I will be doing a piece on Soul of Fight this week, but for now lads, have a gander at this masterpiece, and anticipate it unfolding before our eyes on December 30th.

The card:

SRC Featherweight Title Fight – 5R x 5min
Marlon Sandro vs. Hatsu Hioki

SRC Welterweight Grand Prix Final
KTaro Nakamura vs. Yasubey Enomoto

SRC Middleweight Fight 3R x 5min
Kazuo Misaki vs. Mike Seal

Sengoku Muay Thai-boxing Rules 70kg 3R x 3min
Buakaw Por. Pramuk vs. Hiroki Nakajima

SRC Lightweight Fight 3R x 5min
Kazunori Yokota vs. Jadamba Narantungalag

SRC Heavyweight Fight 3R x 5min
Yoshihiro “KISS” Nakao vs. Dave Herman

Women’s MMA Rules Open-weight
Rin Nakai vs. HARI

SRC Bantamweight Asia Tournament Semifinals
Akitoshi Tamura vs. Taiyo Nakahara
Manabu Inoue vs. Shunichi Shimizu

SRC Jacket Rules Lightweight 1R x 5min
Yukio Sakaguchi vs. Jin Suk Jung

SRC Jacket Rules Lightweight 1R x 5min
Sotaro Yamada vs. Lee Sak Kim

SRC Jacket Rules 59kg 1R x 5min
Kiyotaka Shimizu vs. Ichiro Sugita

Sengoku Muay Thai Rules Heavyweight +86.18kg 3R x 3min
Fabiano Cyclone vs. Ryuta Noji

Sengoku Muay Thai Rules 73kg 3R x 3min
Musashi Miyamoto vs. Hiroki Komata

Sengoku Kickboxing Rules 70kg 3R x 3min
Yusuke Ikei vs. Shintaro Matsukura

Sengoku Kickboxing Rules 70kg 3R x 3min
Yutaro Yamauchi vs. Go Yokoyama

Sengoku Muay Thai Rules Lightweight 60kg 5R x 3min
Kanongsuk Weerasakreck vs. Genki Yamamoto

Sengoku Muay Thai Rules 52kg 5R x 3min
Arashi Fujihara vs. Mutsuki Ebata

Sengoku Kickboxing Rules 61.23kg 2R x 3min
Hironobu Ikegami vs. Yuji Tanaka

Women’s Sengoku Muay Thai Rules Mini Flyweight 47.62kg 5R x 2min
Erika Kamimura vs. Chiharu

Mayhem Miller: Prince or Jester?

Published on various sites, December 2010



Mayhem Miller is ambiguous.
By that, I don’t mean… y’know…is he, isn’t he…as in, I’m not suggesting that it’s hard to tell if the guy is a shirtlifter or not. I’m sure he isn’t, and besides that sort of thing isn’t particularly newsworthy these days, the homosexual community can even marry in certain western countries and the media insists that there is nothing wrong with it. No, he is an ambiguous figure because he is polarising; it is hard to define him. Is he a goofy clown; messing around, playing up for the cameras, starring in his own MTV show, Bully Beatdown, in which he slaps around random folk who get paid to take beatings for their bullying ways? Or, is he merely a true Japanophile, bringing the puro resu spirit into the mainstream of Mixed Martial Arts, using his eccentric personality to draw fans, to hype fights, and to create both a persona, and public interest?

Jason Miller was a welterweight who did two things that affected the course of his career; went to middleweight, and left the UFC after one fight. Who knows what may have happened otherwise; he could have blitzed through every other welterweight other than the one who beat him – current champ GSP – or he may well have floundered. But in returning to his nomadic wanderings between lesser orgs, the new kid on the middleweight block posted an 8-1 win/loss streak following the 2005 GSP fight, right up to making his JMMA debut in slowly wearing down and then destroying pro-wrestler Katsuyori Shibata at Dream 3. In the meantime, his colourful personality landed him his famous (or infamous) MTV gig, and he launched himself up the middleweight ranks to sit pretty in the top 15 – at the least.

But some simply do not care – as shown in the recent “tirade” he launched against a friend of Nick Diaz, that polarised opinion. Despite the very real rivalry between both men, some simply scoff and claim that the act was nothing more than Mayhem “being an attention whore”. They insist that the outspoken eccentric “disrespected his own black belt ceremony”. And – as seen on every message board – the ‘C’ word…. clown.

After the Shibata win, the train was derailed somewhat with a loss to Jacare. One win later, he was facing Jacare in a rematch, with the vacant Dream Middleweight title on the line. Under Pride rules, Miller would have been crowned champ, but the soccer…. no, football kick he used to cut upon Souza’s forehead with had been illegalised in FEG’s Dream, so the bout would be ruled No Contest. His next fight would be another title fight – this time in USA based Strikeforce – and again, controversy occurred.

His entrance saw him pose in a “godlike” way, prior to Lava Lava booming out of the speakers, and Miller prancing down the aisle trying his best to dance amongst the ring girls. The fight saw him Lay’n'Prayed by Jake Shields. But Miller was ungracious afterwards, telling his foe via twitter that he’d given him staph infection. The entrance sparked discontent on some forums, but what followed would make national news in America.

Shields next defeated former 2 division Pride champion Dan Henderson, in what would be Shields’ final fight in Strikeforce before defecting to the UFC. After the fights conclusion, Miller interrupted the departing champions’ post-fight speech to ask “Where’s my rematch buddy?”
What followed that was the Cesar Gracie camp attacking Miller. Notable in their obvious punches thrown at Miller in the fracas were the Diaz brothers, Nick and Nate. And Nick also happened to be Strikeforce champion, in a weight class that Miller has fought at no less. Dollar signs flashed in front of eyes.

Diaz and Miller have since then engaged in a remarkable public spat. Now, this isn’t the first Tito/Ken we’ve had, and will be far from the last – but what sets this apart is that it involves a guy who is popular in Japan (where he fits in) and a star in America…. yet HE is being largely cast as the bad guy, against a surly, monosyllabic pot smoking bad boy.

What exactly is it about Mayhem Miller that so offends the sissy, cowardly, “beta male” snivelling runts in their THOUSANDS that causes such drivel to be posted about him, across tens of MMA forums and message boards?

“Attention whore”…. “clown”…. “goof”…. “irrelevant”….. “liar”…. does it end?

Here is my personal take on it. From here on in, this will be Fletch Blog territory i.e. unflinching, biased and at times non-journalistic opinionated content.

Mayhem is good for the sport. Those saying he is “irrelevant” – when has he been utterly outclassed or embarrassed? Please, don’t bother mentioning Shields, unless the now-welterweight possesses grip strength that would make Ubereem feel like a twelve year old fat girl, i.e. the ability to kill Mayhem anaconda style.
The fact is, recent Mayhem has won some, and lost two. But he’s far from “irrelevant”.

Now lets look at “clown”. Yeah, he’s a clown eh? And you’re a humourless bastard. Chill the fook out, and appreciate the fact that MMA has some colourful characters. We don’t want uniformity in our sport – we want excitement, talking points, drama and madness. So why hate on the “Mayhem” that Jason Miller can potentially – and occasionally – bring us? He’s good for the sport.

“Bully”. I don’t see him “picking on” Nick Diaz as particularly bullying.

*Fact 1: there is definite money to be made from the fight.
*Fact 2: Diaz fought former Light Heavyweight cum middleweight Frank Shamrock at 179lbs, why not meet Mayhem at that weight?
*Fact 3: Mayhem is not some nobody, like the Gracie camp is claiming. The man has been a title challenger in both Strikeforce and Dream.

Now, I love the way Nick Diaz fights, and I want to see this match. But I’m honestly puzzled by the horrendously bad media that Mayhem seems to get. It’s not unanimous, but the man has his share of detractors. Yet to me, he’s the very embodiment of all I love about Japanese MMA. Like me, Mayhem is a self-confessed Japanophile. Like me, he dances in a ridiculous and unembarrassed way. And he brings colour to JMMA – one only has to youtube his entrances at Dream 9 and Dream 16 to see that this man brings the enthusiasm and wackyness that Japan so embraces in its athletes and entertainment.

Give it a rest with your whining. If MMA was filled with boring, humourless fools, it wouldn’t be the sport we know and (supposedly) love.

I may not agree with everything that comes out of Jason Miller’s cakehole, but I’m usually entertained by it. And when I’m not, I have the bloody emotional maturity to not log onto an internet forum to whiiiiinnnneeee about it. Give up, you’re the real clowns!

Shit, the only thing that Jason Miller has ever done that deeply offended me was when he smashed Kazushi Sakuraba’s face in… or at least the shell of Saku. And even Jason knew that it had been his privilege to be in the ring with a true fightsports legend like the Gracie Hunter.

War Mayhem “Meeellohhhhhhhh” (Japanese announcer).

It’s been emotional.

Fletch

Bibiano versus Takaya: Rematch For The Gold

Controversy is guaranteed to either delight fans, or p!ss them off.
Every JMMA fan was buzzing over the Dream Featherweight Grand Prix. Sticking the likes of Hideo Tokoro, Hiroyuki Takaya and Bibiano Fernandes in a tournament that involves them fighting more than once against each other on the same night in the final round, was never going to be anything less than epic. And an undoubted 100% of the viewership enjoyed themselves watching the tourney, right up until the point when the final bell rang on Bibi and Takaya’s fantastic battle at Dream 11… right about when the judges’ decision announced. And when the inaugural Featherweight champ of Dream was declared – on the basis of that decision – to be Bibiano Fernandes, the ratio of satisfied fans promptly dipped by 30% at the least.
Personally, I loved it. Controversy gets me going, and hey, someone had to win!
Besides, Bibi did as much as Takaya, just that his offence did not receive the same exhilarated response from the English (speaking) commentary team as Takaya’s did.
The section of the hardcore who picked Takaya to win must be pleased with his Road to Redemption, of sorts. After being “robbed” in their eyes of the Grand Prix win – and thus, the FW divisional belt too – it must have been galling for both the man himself and his support, as his first fight after the GP saw rising star Michihiro Omigawa turn his lights off at Dynamite 2009. Clearly, 2010 has been his year of recovery, featuring a shocking KO win over Joachim “Hellboy” Hansen and a stoppage of Chase Beebe in only 1:45 of round 1. Can he top the year off with a vengeance by stopping the capable champion, a man who seemingly improves with every performance?
If there was ever a time for a featherweight not called Marlon Sandro or Jose Aldo to get Bibiano, now is the time. For a start, his constant improvement could well make him the most underrated “rising star” in MMA. Secondly, he has been inactive, and may show ring rust. His only fight of 2010 saw him impressively defeat former Lightweight champ Joachim Hansen, who was making his first sojourn down to featherweight after losing his lightweight strap to Shinya Aoki.
Bibiano’s six fight win streak boasts an impressive body of work. Should he lose, will he showbouncebackability and return to the top ranks, and put another win streak together as he did after losing his second and third professional fights? Or will he be proven to have been a flash in the pan, who slicked by with narrow decision wins over Hansen, Takaya and the controversial did-he-didn’t-he tapout win over Joe Warren?
My thoughts are that neither apply. I think it takes Bibiano, Sandro or perhaps Hatsu Hioki to topple Bibiano, and the rest of Japanese MMA’s FW scene are beneath him in rank and skill. Pure speculation, but indulge me: in my opinion, a disinterested Kid would lose a rematch; Tokoro would be stopped; Lion would be decisioned; Omigawa would be decisioned; Matsune would be destroyed; Kanehara would be hurt and pounded out; and Moon Wolf would be heart-breakingly stopped. Bibiano is an underrated and damn talented fighter, and I think that he will prove that once again at Dynamite against the warrior Takaya, who gets stopped late in an epic brawl full of straight and looping punches, explosive takedowns and maybe some ground’n'pound.
Should Dream die, my thoughts are that Bibiano could possibly be angling to join another org – be it UFC, Strikeforce, or Sengoku – as the unbeaten champ in FEG’s most recent MMA org. Takaya is tough, durable and has obvious knockout power. That may not be enough to beat the rising star that is Bibi.
Then again…stars can burn out fast. We shall see. Thank you FEG, for this match-up.
Fletch

Bizarre Dream Press Conference; Mayhem Miller Confronts a Keyboard Warrior

Published on various sites, December 2010



It’s a slow morning. I’m watching the Dream Dynamite!! (must we insist on calling it K-1 Dynamite!!?) press conference, and it’s as bizarre as expected. Sakuraba comes out in some Japanese manga mask, to some truly epic music. Nagashima enters…. and he’s dressed like a girl. A blonde schoolgirl, in a skirt. The ‘fists up staredown’ pose sees him put his pinkie finger next to his mouth, provocatively. Aoki is amusingly unamused – this is an obvious jibe at his former cross-dressing during a press visit to his former Tokyo dojo, prior to expulsion due to his conduct at last years Dynamite.

And who is sat front and centre? INOKI! They’ve got the Ultimate Chin on board. This is comical – what next, Akira Maeda? Lets roll out the Good Ol’ Boys; this might be their last (that is, unless the insider tips and rumours about new investors aren’t true or don’t come to fruition) so why not roll out the old guard? Fook it, Inoki will probably pull some viewers in. 3, 2, 1, go!

Every time Sakuraba opens his mouth (not that we can see it) everyone presents laughs. Aoki and Kawajiri are side by side behind him, grinning. They seem cool with each other, which is good – Aoki suggested they train together on twitter a while ago, in a very respectful manner.

Sakuraba will face Zaromskis for the Welterweight title, confirmed. Marius isn’t there, unsurprisingly, but Saku doesn’t apparently feel like pre-fight hype anyway. He’s cracking jokes – he’ll probably end up getting hammered today, smoking cigars with Inoki and threatening to beat up Yakuza guys. What a lunatic – WAR SAKURABA!

The other co-main (on the MMA side) is a title fight; Bibiano rematches Takaya, and once again the featherweight belt is on the line – as previously reported.

There will be a third Dream champ confirmed on the card in Aoki, but it will apparently be a mixed rules fight with Yuichiro Nagashima. They’re doing another Bob Sapp/Jerome LeBanner type match – one round will be Dream (MMA) rules, the next will be K-1 rules. I love these fights. It may not go more than one round though, either way – striking clinic against Shaolin apart, Aoki is far from impressive standing. He is also the absolute worst matchup in MMA for a striker, especially from K-1 as opposed to a striking orientated Mixed Martial Artist.

I cant wait.


Jason “Mayhem” Miller, a black belt and a screen name

Mayhem Miller is a colourful character. He receives his black belt in the following video, but not before confronting some “homie” of Nick Diaz, who supposedly has some name or other on the internet, which he has used to “talk shit” about Miller for his campaign against Diaz.
Whatever. The guy isn’t eloquent, funny or particularly interesting, there seems to be NO point to him even being there. Mayhem confronts him, and the guy barely speaks. Son…. a real internet personality like myself grows up idolising Liam Gallagher, and would have acted accordingly. That was ridiculous – you dont deserve a name. At least TRY to say something funny!
Fletch

K-1/Dream Dynamite Finally Shaping Up: Fights Announced

Published on various sites, December 2010



You can’t stop rock’n'roll, and you cant stop JMMA either.
Even though they may be on the verge of death, lets hope that FEG plan on going down swinging. The Dynamite card has looked disastrous, with only one fight booked less than a month prior to the card. Now, the filler is being arranged around the FW title fight, and fingers crossed, it will be another memorable end of year card and a solid addition to what is actually my favourite event in all of fightsports.
Dynamite/K1 2010Last year saw the anticipation of a Dream vs Sengoku head to head theme, at least on the Mixed Martial Arts side of the card. Aoki vs Hirota in particular drew much speculation, as some pondered whether or not the mercurial Dream champ had FINALLY met his kryptonite at lightweight, a powerful boxer-wrestler. While it was not to be, as Aoki promptly snapped Hirota’s arm in a copper-lock (it would be Aoki’s next fight against Gilbert Melendez that finally saw the JMMA juggernaut toppled), the anticipation for the card was fever pitch, despite Overeem and Mousasi booked in what were ostensibly “squash matches”… which proved to be the case.
This year, due to their obvious financial perils, the affair and build up seems a tad more subdued. But now, FINALLY, there seems to be some momentum and focus.
Surpassing what appeared to be main-event in Bibiano vs Takaya II – a rematch of the FW Grand Prix final, with the belt at stake – is the reported Welterweight title match-up, as returning Grand Prix winner Marius Zaromskis makes his first divisional defence of the title against former MW, LHW and Open Weight legend Kazushi Sakuraba, who drops down to welterweight for the first time, after a career that includes victories over UFC openweight, heavyweight, and light heavyweight champions alike.
Zaromskis is on a two-fight skid, but always dangerous. Sakuraba is more removed from his prime than Hugh Heffner. But regardless, the Gracie Hunter is one of the most entertaining and talented fighters in the history of recorded fightsports, so it is not unfeasible that he could defeat the wounded Zaromskis, a man whose primary skill is striking anyway. A vintage Saku submission? It would take a hardcore Whitemare fan to not wish to see the triumphant goodbye of a legend of the game like Saku, who outside of his skills is truly one of the gutsiest bastards to ever step in a ring.
As I called on IronForgesIron over a month ago (brushes dirt off shoulder)  Tatsuya Kawajiri will face fellow top 10 ranked Strikeforce lightweight and former champion Josh Thomson, who is fresh from defeating former K-1 Hero’s LW champ JZ Cavalcante. See this article for my feelings on that tasty, tasty matchup:  http://ironforgesiron.net/index.php/2010/11/fletch-blog-thomson-bout-could-be-career-revival-for-kawajiri-the-crusher-2/
The annual minor K-1 tourney has been cancelled, but with the reported participation of JLB in an MMA-rules bout (as ever – some things never change) and of course the usual suspects; no, not Todd Hackney, McManus, Fenster, Verbal Kint and Dean Keaton, but Alistair Overeem, Melvin Manhoef and Gegard Mousasi…then perhaps, let us dare to DREAM that this Dynamite card – heavily rumoured to be the last FEG event before financial collapse – can live up to expectations and end the year 2010 on the best note possible.
Banzai, JMMA fans. Dare to DREAM.
Fletch